After having thought about it for a while, it is my understanding that science as we know it and the concept of free will are fundamentally incompatible. It seems to me that anyone who claims to only believe in scientific ''facts'' cannot reasonably believe in actual genuine free will. It also seems to me that only some form of leap of faith can lead someone to believe in pure, authentic free will because to the best of my knowledge, there is not a single bit of scientific data that can prove human beings to be anything else than very elaborate ''machines''.
Before the discovery of quantum indeterminacy, science understood the world as being purely mechanistic. That meant that all phenomena could be attributed to the very precise and strict laws that govern the universe. If followed rigorously, universal mechanism can only lead to anthropic mechanism, which maintains that all human affairs can, in the end, be explained in mechanical terms.
Rare are the ones who will adhere to this strictly deterministic view of the world and the reasons for this are obvious. This worldview shuts the door completely to the concept of free will and very few of us who can admit having no freedom whatsoever. Not only does it defy common sense but it is also counterintuitive.
Science has evolved and it now faces a much more complex reality. The microcosmic world seems to function under some sort of fundamental indeterminacy. The implications of this are huge. No longer is the universe understood as being purely mechanical.
But does this really open the door to the concept of free will? I believe it can, but only if one is ready to go beyond scientific knowledge (leap of faith).
If one is not ready for a leap of faith and desires to ground his understanding of the world in purely scientific terms, I believe one's only logical position is to assume free will to be an illusion. The only way out of this is to find a reasonable hypothesis in which free will becomes possible. But this hypothesis will probably be impossible to verify. I have yet to be exposed to a reasonable scientific hypothesis that makes genuine free will possible.
Your thoughts?
Before the discovery of quantum indeterminacy, science understood the world as being purely mechanistic. That meant that all phenomena could be attributed to the very precise and strict laws that govern the universe. If followed rigorously, universal mechanism can only lead to anthropic mechanism, which maintains that all human affairs can, in the end, be explained in mechanical terms.
Rare are the ones who will adhere to this strictly deterministic view of the world and the reasons for this are obvious. This worldview shuts the door completely to the concept of free will and very few of us who can admit having no freedom whatsoever. Not only does it defy common sense but it is also counterintuitive.
Science has evolved and it now faces a much more complex reality. The microcosmic world seems to function under some sort of fundamental indeterminacy. The implications of this are huge. No longer is the universe understood as being purely mechanical.
But does this really open the door to the concept of free will? I believe it can, but only if one is ready to go beyond scientific knowledge (leap of faith).
If one is not ready for a leap of faith and desires to ground his understanding of the world in purely scientific terms, I believe one's only logical position is to assume free will to be an illusion. The only way out of this is to find a reasonable hypothesis in which free will becomes possible. But this hypothesis will probably be impossible to verify. I have yet to be exposed to a reasonable scientific hypothesis that makes genuine free will possible.
Your thoughts?
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